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Chicago examiner vol x no 129 a m monday Chicago may 20 1912 monday y refllftered in u s patent office price one cent deliver by cirflir m santi ptr mctk registration for boy city will begin to-day leaders of Chicago boys clubs to bring names to room 520 examiner build ing outsiders to use mails free summer camp opens on july 1 and two weeks m city of boys for boys and by boys open to all boys this is the first registration day for boys clubs and organizations all over chi cago and within a radius of 100 miles of this city whose members wish to take advantage of the examiner's offer of a free vacation of two weeks from july 1 to july 14 ln a city ruled by boys the contest that will gain a free vaca tion to boys is open to every type of boys organization religious social mili tary industrial or commercial it also is open to boys who desire to work singly for if tbey earn the right to a vacation they will be enrolled by the examiner m the nearest boys club so that they may be come a member of some ward of the^boy city wbich ls to be established by the valparaiso chautauqua association on the beautiful 100-acre tract surrounding sager lake near valparaiso ind no more ideal spot could be conceived than srffeer's lake for a boy city no boy wbo has not enjoyed the delights of a city administered by boys can realize the fun he will hava n a two weeks va cation m the boy civ near valparaiso fifth national boy ci.y this will be the fifth national boy city nnder the direction of judge george willis brown who is the founder of the boy city movement judge brown believes m boys he believes that every boy has a fundamental basis of good and tbat all that is required is to let the boy work out the good that is m him judge brown bas proved it he ought to know whereof be speaks for he has tried it for four years and is satisfied he has struck the keynote m the boy problem all a boy has to remember when he goes to boy city is that he must play the game square that means that whatever he does he must be fair and square about it if he does not he will have to leave boy city and go back home branded by his own playmates as an unfair boy boy city will have a mayor a city coun cil a treasurer and every officer tbat a regular city has the laws of that city will be passed by a council elected by the boy citizens of it and they will be expected to keep the laws that are made the fun of it is that the boys pass their own laws no adult tells them what laws to pass judge brown believes that the boy if left to himself will play as fair as any man in fact he has a much more abiding faith m his fellow boy than he has ln his fellow man he says boys average np as franker more open more truthful citizens than men do yoa see just how it is the judge thinks the best way is to leave lt up to the boys and the boys ln all of the boy cities es tablished thus far have proved the judge to be right examiner believes m boys so now the examiner with that same abiding faith m the ability of Chicago boys and those ln the suburbs to play the game square ls opening the door of oppor tunity to this splendid vacation time lv boy city for two weeks you can work or play as you choose you may 101 l on the banks of beautiful sager's lake or go boating on its smooth surface you may swim or play hall or go fishing and if yon choose you may work at something that will bring m some money for there will be a chance for boys to earn n.'oney at boy city if yon run short of cash you won't need to run home to father but just buckle down and do some work and earn some pocket money that's what helps to make a good citizen the ability to help one's self and you'll get just that opportunity at boy city will run their own bank the boys will have their own bank their own street cleaning force their own indus trial pursuits and their owu bull teams the examiner wants every boy to avail himself of the chance to go to boy city and every boy who accepts the examiner's offer will go there as an independent citi zen because he has earned the right to free transportation a free teut and board and free entertainment all the tin_e he ls there that's what helps too to make a good citizen to be independent every twenty paid-up aunual subscrip tions of s3 each to the examiner will entitle the boy who obtains them to a gangway slips lets 125 into water two drown forty persons taken unconscious from puget sound after acci dent at seattle pier seattle wash may 19 prom 100 to 125 passengers of the seattle-tacoma steamer flyer were precipitated into puget sound this morning through the collapse of a portable gangway ou the col man wharf from which they were going aboard two were drowned and of he rescued forty were unconscious nnd all were buffering from fright and shock that the toll of death was not greater is ascribed to the proximity of many water craft m the harbor the good discipline maintained by the flyer's officers and the presence on the wharf and its approaches of several hundred spectators all of whom engaged m the rescue work j h johns a negro bootblack swam and saved six persons from drowning mrs h leonard and carl four-year old son of mr and mrs george bruder both of this city were drowned of the rescued several are iv a dan gerous condition the flyer was going out on her second voyage of the day for tacoma the gangplank had been run out the shore end resting on a movable freight gang way which is lowered and raised by ma chiner this freight gangway is 10 feet wide and abont 20 feet long trobably 200 passengers had gone aboard when the gangway machinery slipped and the affair collapsed fully 100 persons were struggling m the water or clinging to piles the cries of distress from the women and children continued nearly half an hour until all were picked up mr and mrs james dalton of scran ton pa were among the last rescued both had gone down twice and mis dal ton was unconscious for some time sbe had come to seattle to attend the funeral of her father 750,000 fire in houston texas city's business section threat ened by blaze houston texas may 19 fire to-day caused 750,000 damage m the busiuess sec tion here the buildings destroyed are thej stowers building a handsome four-story i structure the temple building a four-j story office winding the at'<au a_t._lliig,'j a tbree-story structure and the top floors of the texas company's twelve-story build ing occupied by the offices of the big oil corporation scores of professional men and real estate firms lost all their office lixtures and busiuess pape,s the houston typographical union and the knights of columbus lost all their possessions father dies kills self sixteen-year-old girl's heart broken *â– at loss of parent grief over the death of her father sev enteen days ago caused mary kocovsky sixteen years old to end her life late sat urday night by swallowing carbolic acid m her home 2917 west twenty-fifth street she was found unconscious on the floor of her room by her mother and died before a physician could be sumnvoned my daugh ter's heart was broken when her father died mrs kocovsky told the policemeu who removed the body she thought the world of him and several times said my father's gone and i wish i would die too " three hurt in crash women standing on walk injured when motorcycles collide one man was seriously injured and two women were bruised last night when two motorcycles collided at one hundred and third street and ewing avenue south chi cago the two women who were injured were standing on the walls waiting for the machines to pass and when they col lided the machines rolled to the curbing and the women were knocked down those injured are andrew oskersko 8497 balti more avenue mrs h morris 10248 ave nue l mrs w h jones hammond ind flies to maxine elliott visitor lacking other conveyance carried by claude grahame white special cable to the examiner london may 19 claude grahame white used his aeroplane this afternoon to carry a passenger to bushey to meet miss maxine elliott mlss elliott await ed the visitor at her country place and on being advised that no train was avail able white took the passenger aboard at the hendon aeroplane station and landed him safely at his destination passenger flights were also made by turner ewen moorhotise bucks and prensell boy lost on lake shore henry zeka nine years old ls believed to have drowned m the lake at the foot of van buren street saturday afternoon the boy went to the lake front with his brother george nnd a number of other boys to play in their game the missing boy became separated from his compan ions when the latter looked for him on their return he had disappeared titanic lifeboat sighted special cable to the examiner plymouth may 19 passengers arrtv-i ing to-day on the steamship philadelphia reported passing an empty lifeboat from the titanic the boot was seen on tues day but its location was not known ' sues armour after pork poisons family wealthy new yorker says wife and children nearly died with trichinosis passed u s inspectors . packing firm dodges blame saying it was not re sponsible for tests new york slay 19 as a direct re sult of the recent disclosures of the in adequate inspection by both government officials and beef trust employers of pork and beef carcasses the first suits ever instituted against the beef trust by a consumer were filed iv the united states district court here yesterday edward c heimerdiuger a wealthy dress manufacturer of 141 madison avenue new york has brought five suits aggre gating 25,000 against armour & co be cause the complaints state his wife and his three sons were poisoned by eating armour smoked pork infected with the deadly trichina parasites victims cure only temporary as it is mr dushkind says the cure effected m their cases is only temporary as no one ever affected by trichinosis completely recovers mr heimei'dinger said : we bought the trichina-infected pork december 13 last we ordered some smoked pork from our butcher here de cember 13 and it reached us from the armour plant m Chicago two days later smoked pork is like smoked beef meant to be eaten raw if you want to although it can be cooked on january 1 my youngest boy george , who is ten years old was taken violently ill with cramps intestinal troubles and extremely painful muscular reactions the next day alfred aged twelve was stricken the same way the n*xt day bernard my oldest boy fourteen years old went to bed sick witli the same symptoms and my wife was next then our cook sophie | kettei-er and our laundress lauretta mc i'allisrei were likewise gripped by the dis ease it was due solely to their excellent eon i ditlon and vitality dr messenger said that my wife and my boys recovered at all ' , excuses of armour attorney i took the matter up with armour & co through mr dushkind i told them of the facts and what do you think the replied that i was a german and ought to know the danger of eating raw pork although they were perfectly willing to sell it withont stating tbat cooking was necessary or important and they followed up this statement by another letter telling me that as long as the government in spectors passed their food products tbey were satisfied and that it was too expen sive to make microscopic inspection ol pork carcasses to learn whether trichina parasites existed m the meat or not in two letters received by mr dusbkind from w c kirk attorney for armour & co the following paragraphs occur trichina is a parasite common to pork and can only be detected by microscopic examinations which of course we do not make we might say for your general in formation that a hog infected with trichina appears just as healthy as one not so in fected the bureau of animal industry lof the department of agriculture some years ago decided that the expense of making microscopic examinations of every carcass would be far m excess of any good derived from such examinations in a second letter commenting on mr dushkind's contentions that since armour & co put out smoked pork packages for general consumption they were liable for diseases emanating from the consumption of such meat mr kirk said as stated before all our meat products are produced under the supervision of the united states government inspectors and the fact that the cooking of meat absolute ly destroys trichina so that trichinous meat is just as wholesome as that which is not infected seems to the writer to relieve us of any liability to your client 4,000 gems stolen owner in next room mr and mrs a l tetze play ing cards as burglar en ters their home leaving wakens nurse thief escapes through win dow as alarm is given search futile while mr and mr 6 alexander l tetze and two friends were playing cards iv tbeir home 5828 kenmore aveuue a burglar en tered au adjoining roon and stole jew elry valued at 4,000 the thief wakened a nurse maid as he was leaving through a window her screams attracted mr tetze and bis guests but the burglar slid down a ladder ran iuto the alley and disappeared the police searched the neighborhood all night but no trace of the man was found with the exception of a gold watch all the jewelry belonged to mrs tetze there were brooches rings and other articles one of which a diamond cross breastpin was valued at 1,000 mr tetze ls president of the plamondon & tetze company 40 south clinton street his home ls m an apartment building mr nnd mrs e strom who live m the same building were gi3ests of mr and mrs tetze they were playing cards in the dining room saturday night in the nur sery mr tetze's laughter seven years old and her nurse ella quinlan were sleeping wakens nurse when leaving the burglar climbed by a ladder to a window m the nursery pried it open and entered without waking the nurse or child going into the hall he passed to the sleep ing apartments of mr and mrs tetze where thc jewelry was on a dressing table after picking up everything of value the man returned to the nnrsery and climbed out of the window when doing so he turned on an electric flash light which shined m the nurse's face she wakened saw the man and screamed . . . v mr and mrs tetze ami mr and mrs strom ran into the nursery but the man had gone mr tetze ran to the rear of the apartment and saw the burglar running into the alley he immediately notified the police bnt an all-night search failed to reveal a trace of him mrs tetze in the meantime had discovered the loÂ«-j of her jewelry many gems m loot the articles stolen are four diamond rings valued at s4ts 300 185 and 175 cameo ring valued at 330 gold watch and chain belonging to mr tetze valued at 200 carved purse valued at 10 gold meshbag valued at 16 diamond cross breastpin valued al 1,000 rings and breastpins valued at 1,1(>0 the burglar must have been familiar with my home said mr tetze i never heard of such a daring affair he man aged to get the jewels and escape while we were playing cards m an adjoining room we did not see him because the door was closed 500 honor dolly madison prominent women gather at capital for event to-day washington d c may 19 wives of many distinguished democratic statesmen arrived m washington to-day to attend the dolly madison breakfast to-morrow at 12:30 when nearly five hundred guests will be present mrs judson harmon wife of the ohio governor ls a guest of mrs timothy t ansberry mrs william jennings bryan ls the house guest of mrs henry d clayton among the other distinguished guests expected are mrs ann pitzer of colorado springs sister of champ clark mrs thomas a edison and miss edison mrs thomas marshall wife of the governor of indiana mrs john r mclean mrs william randolph hearst mrs alton b parker and mrs henry watterson mlss virginia miller and mrs harmon miller collateral de scendants of dolly madison will be pres ent suicide in palmer house rich planter shoots self jilted by mrs rosenblatt mrs france rosenblatt scion 0 noble german family rejected by nelson morris cousin blames drirk â€” v purned by the woman he loved â€” mrs frances rosenblatt a cousin v^x of the late nelson morris â€” henry spruck von armenthal scion of rl a noble german family better known as henry o spruck the r oregon apple king brought his romance to a tragic end saturday when he took his life m the palmer house by shooting himself it is better so sobbed mrs rosenblatt when told of the death of her suitor swaying to and fro m an agony of grief she cried liquor the curse that tears women's hearts is responsible for this awful end to what started so happily henry spruck as i always knew him was a flne handsome charming man of great ability ard under ' sensibilities i drink prevented marriage in june i loved him had it no been for his dissipation we would have been married last june but when the curse showed i broke with him and declared i would never marry him only last friday night he was with me and i told him â– " mrs rosenblatt stopped to choke back her sobs and then continued he had been drinking heavily but promised to reform if i would become his wife i knew from past experience how hopeless it was to expect him to reform and told him i was disgusted with him he wanted to kiss me good-night but i refused and th-r when he wanted to touch me i drew back from him revolver in his pocket then i grasped his arm however when he put his hand oi __ ._, _.._), as i although i doubted that he would carry out his numerous threats to kill j himself i was not sure about him i think that i felt a revolver m his : pocket then saturday morning at 7 o'clock he wrote to me saying that because of my actions the night before i wouid never see him again alive he said that if there is such a thing as a spirit world which he doubted he wojlld haunt me poor fellow still i know it is all for the best he loved me and i loved him if ever a woman did love a man but there could have been only one end to it we are both better off than we would have been tegetrer wit'i him m the clutches of the drink curse offered her 50,000 to wed mrs rosenblatt who is the widow of benjamin roscnb att a wealthy leather dealer of new york is at th c hotel hayes sixty-fourth street and lexington avenue having gone there from the belvoir hotel where she lived with her married sister mrs jeanette eachus i came here to avoid henry mrs rosenblatt explained i wanted to break off with him and only saw him last friday because he wrote such wild letters that i feared for him he offered me 50,000 to marry hlra just a year ago but he has never given me any money or anything of value except a small diamond en gagement ring that belonged to his first wife that i returned to him i never knew that he was of noble family but heard it once and often teased him he always denied it von armenthal had not been seen m the lobby of the palmer house since early saturday afternoon when his door was forced yesterday he was found lying on the floor m his room his head pillowed on a roll of towels in his right hand he grasped the ugly weapon with which he had taken mb life while m the other hand he held a picture of mrs roson identity of bungalow girl still mystery bessie jones said to be slain girl is found alive m home m norfolk va known by 2 other names police here continue to gather more proof that dead Chicago man is the one sought m los angeles cal handbag he brought from west is believed to be stained with blood doctor tells of woman's visit while the police of Chicago were prov ing yesterday more conclusively than ever that caiphas columbus dillon who killed himself saturday morning by diving under a northwestern train at wilmette was the slayer of the bungalow girl at los angeles the police of norfolk va were proving even more conclusively that the victim of the bungalow tragedy wns not j bessie jones bessie jores has used at her eonven i ience the names of bessie howard and | bessie yoglev ruder two of the aliases she was kinwu m the very household of c c dillon under all three of them she is known at norfolk and under all three she was found alive yesterday at 214 strst ford street norfolk mj stery has been piled on mysterj ir the bungalow case just at the moment when it seemed certain that all mystery had been dispelled dillon did not kill the norfolk girl whom then did he kill before that looming interrogation point the police of Chicago of los angeles of norfolk of all the cities m all the states where girls have disappeared stand poised not knowing m what direction to turn bu ready to turn ln any direction new clew m handbag a yellow handbag found in the dillou home on evanston avenue occupied by dil lon's real wife yesterday gave the po lice more evidence to add to the incrim inating mass already piled up against dillon three initials had beeu scraped off the handbag in a leather pocket inside tho bag stains were found although an inef fectual effort had been made to remore them the effort had been made recently for the smell of carbolic acid was still strong the handbag was examined by actlnj captain of detectives james gleason de tective sergeant harry o'donnell and thomas mcfarland and by james mark ham secretary of the detective bureau all of these men have bad extensive ex perience m identifying such stains all agree that the stains found inside dillon's handbag are blood stains all agree that dillon must have postponed his attempt to eraÃŸe the stains until after he reached Chicago police give explanation when dillon had taken that girlâ€”who ever she was to the los angeles bungalow and killed her said sergeant mcfarland he wiped her blood from bis hands first with her handkerchief which was too small for the purpose and then with his own he left her handkerchief there be side her figuring that it could not iden tify him but he placed his own ln the yellow handbag all bloody as it was then he left los angeles his mind dazed he could think of nothing to do but to keep traveling it was not until after he reached Chicago and resume work at his trade that he was able to it more connectedly of his predicament ; to plan m greater detail the c-cstruc'.k . of evidence against himself thus it was not uutil lie !:.><! i '.. lished himself once more m hi legitf ... home with bis real wife thai lie !â€¢... the blood stains ir the bain i tried to erase them with earlhil . < â– .-.. i the greater pun of dillon - soiled :... found ut hls home was new anu l.au i been laundered as was sbowll i.y li.i v that there were uo laundry li.tw â€¢-.. one of the shirts hail been launder it i the laundry murk had been cm front tl neckband late last night a new direction was given to the efforts of the police when dr j t . presnell whose office ls at 41103 evanston nvenue told captain gleason he believed he could identify the bungalow victim detectives mcfarland and o'donnell and [ secretary markham of the detective bu continued on 4th page 6th column continued on 2d page 7th column ____ - t.-___tsi *______, 1 Chicago and vicinity unset ' saj!--sbjp sc a tled weather monday and tuesday fel^3tw________j wit>l showers warmer monday east '' ' b^s er,y ' sn,ttln 9 to southerly winds and j k wh probably increasing j m \ j bauge of temperatures yesterday jtyÃŸ v is lowest 43 average 46 in the second section of this paper to-day you will find nearly a hundred rla^-'^^nt'-nns of want ads if you are looking for a maid you will get a good maid here if you are looking for a posi tion you may find just the position you , desire m these columns if you are looking for a room or an apartment you will probably find wha 1 â€¢â€¢">?. want m this list in fact everything you can think of aimost is advertised here from a used piano to an auto mobile whether you want something or want to sell something if you will both read these columns and advertise m them you will get your desire Â® tisers has examined and cert________-__l the eire i lation of thie publ_eat___-b the figures of c irculatioi contained i_-.4 as.ociat ion's report only are gnaranth_l ammoc iat ion of americmn admmrliomth no 2399 whitehall bldg n 7 co

Chicago examiner vol x no 129 a m monday Chicago may 20 1912 monday y refllftered in u s patent office price one cent deliver by cirflir m santi ptr mctk registration for boy city will begin to-day leaders of Chicago boys clubs to bring names to room 520 examiner build ing outsiders to use mails free summer camp opens on july 1 and two weeks m city of boys for boys and by boys open to all boys this is the first registration day for boys clubs and organizations all over chi cago and within a radius of 100 miles of this city whose members wish to take advantage of the examiner's offer of a free vacation of two weeks from july 1 to july 14 ln a city ruled by boys the contest that will gain a free vaca tion to boys is open to every type of boys organization religious social mili tary industrial or commercial it also is open to boys who desire to work singly for if tbey earn the right to a vacation they will be enrolled by the examiner m the nearest boys club so that they may be come a member of some ward of the^boy city wbich ls to be established by the valparaiso chautauqua association on the beautiful 100-acre tract surrounding sager lake near valparaiso ind no more ideal spot could be conceived than srffeer's lake for a boy city no boy wbo has not enjoyed the delights of a city administered by boys can realize the fun he will hava n a two weeks va cation m the boy civ near valparaiso fifth national boy ci.y this will be the fifth national boy city nnder the direction of judge george willis brown who is the founder of the boy city movement judge brown believes m boys he believes that every boy has a fundamental basis of good and tbat all that is required is to let the boy work out the good that is m him judge brown bas proved it he ought to know whereof be speaks for he has tried it for four years and is satisfied he has struck the keynote m the boy problem all a boy has to remember when he goes to boy city is that he must play the game square that means that whatever he does he must be fair and square about it if he does not he will have to leave boy city and go back home branded by his own playmates as an unfair boy boy city will have a mayor a city coun cil a treasurer and every officer tbat a regular city has the laws of that city will be passed by a council elected by the boy citizens of it and they will be expected to keep the laws that are made the fun of it is that the boys pass their own laws no adult tells them what laws to pass judge brown believes that the boy if left to himself will play as fair as any man in fact he has a much more abiding faith m his fellow boy than he has ln his fellow man he says boys average np as franker more open more truthful citizens than men do yoa see just how it is the judge thinks the best way is to leave lt up to the boys and the boys ln all of the boy cities es tablished thus far have proved the judge to be right examiner believes m boys so now the examiner with that same abiding faith m the ability of Chicago boys and those ln the suburbs to play the game square ls opening the door of oppor tunity to this splendid vacation time lv boy city for two weeks you can work or play as you choose you may 101 l on the banks of beautiful sager's lake or go boating on its smooth surface you may swim or play hall or go fishing and if yon choose you may work at something that will bring m some money for there will be a chance for boys to earn n.'oney at boy city if yon run short of cash you won't need to run home to father but just buckle down and do some work and earn some pocket money that's what helps to make a good citizen the ability to help one's self and you'll get just that opportunity at boy city will run their own bank the boys will have their own bank their own street cleaning force their own indus trial pursuits and their owu bull teams the examiner wants every boy to avail himself of the chance to go to boy city and every boy who accepts the examiner's offer will go there as an independent citi zen because he has earned the right to free transportation a free teut and board and free entertainment all the tin_e he ls there that's what helps too to make a good citizen to be independent every twenty paid-up aunual subscrip tions of s3 each to the examiner will entitle the boy who obtains them to a gangway slips lets 125 into water two drown forty persons taken unconscious from puget sound after acci dent at seattle pier seattle wash may 19 prom 100 to 125 passengers of the seattle-tacoma steamer flyer were precipitated into puget sound this morning through the collapse of a portable gangway ou the col man wharf from which they were going aboard two were drowned and of he rescued forty were unconscious nnd all were buffering from fright and shock that the toll of death was not greater is ascribed to the proximity of many water craft m the harbor the good discipline maintained by the flyer's officers and the presence on the wharf and its approaches of several hundred spectators all of whom engaged m the rescue work j h johns a negro bootblack swam and saved six persons from drowning mrs h leonard and carl four-year old son of mr and mrs george bruder both of this city were drowned of the rescued several are iv a dan gerous condition the flyer was going out on her second voyage of the day for tacoma the gangplank had been run out the shore end resting on a movable freight gang way which is lowered and raised by ma chiner this freight gangway is 10 feet wide and abont 20 feet long trobably 200 passengers had gone aboard when the gangway machinery slipped and the affair collapsed fully 100 persons were struggling m the water or clinging to piles the cries of distress from the women and children continued nearly half an hour until all were picked up mr and mrs james dalton of scran ton pa were among the last rescued both had gone down twice and mis dal ton was unconscious for some time sbe had come to seattle to attend the funeral of her father 750,000 fire in houston texas city's business section threat ened by blaze houston texas may 19 fire to-day caused 750,000 damage m the busiuess sec tion here the buildings destroyed are thej stowers building a handsome four-story i structure the temple building a four-j story office winding the at'0 the burglar must have been familiar with my home said mr tetze i never heard of such a daring affair he man aged to get the jewels and escape while we were playing cards m an adjoining room we did not see him because the door was closed 500 honor dolly madison prominent women gather at capital for event to-day washington d c may 19 wives of many distinguished democratic statesmen arrived m washington to-day to attend the dolly madison breakfast to-morrow at 12:30 when nearly five hundred guests will be present mrs judson harmon wife of the ohio governor ls a guest of mrs timothy t ansberry mrs william jennings bryan ls the house guest of mrs henry d clayton among the other distinguished guests expected are mrs ann pitzer of colorado springs sister of champ clark mrs thomas a edison and miss edison mrs thomas marshall wife of the governor of indiana mrs john r mclean mrs william randolph hearst mrs alton b parker and mrs henry watterson mlss virginia miller and mrs harmon miller collateral de scendants of dolly madison will be pres ent suicide in palmer house rich planter shoots self jilted by mrs rosenblatt mrs france rosenblatt scion 0 noble german family rejected by nelson morris cousin blames drirk â€” v purned by the woman he loved â€” mrs frances rosenblatt a cousin v^x of the late nelson morris â€” henry spruck von armenthal scion of rl a noble german family better known as henry o spruck the r oregon apple king brought his romance to a tragic end saturday when he took his life m the palmer house by shooting himself it is better so sobbed mrs rosenblatt when told of the death of her suitor swaying to and fro m an agony of grief she cried liquor the curse that tears women's hearts is responsible for this awful end to what started so happily henry spruck as i always knew him was a flne handsome charming man of great ability ard under ' sensibilities i drink prevented marriage in june i loved him had it no been for his dissipation we would have been married last june but when the curse showed i broke with him and declared i would never marry him only last friday night he was with me and i told him â– " mrs rosenblatt stopped to choke back her sobs and then continued he had been drinking heavily but promised to reform if i would become his wife i knew from past experience how hopeless it was to expect him to reform and told him i was disgusted with him he wanted to kiss me good-night but i refused and th-r when he wanted to touch me i drew back from him revolver in his pocket then i grasped his arm however when he put his hand oi __ ._, _.._), as i although i doubted that he would carry out his numerous threats to kill j himself i was not sure about him i think that i felt a revolver m his : pocket then saturday morning at 7 o'clock he wrote to me saying that because of my actions the night before i wouid never see him again alive he said that if there is such a thing as a spirit world which he doubted he wojlld haunt me poor fellow still i know it is all for the best he loved me and i loved him if ever a woman did love a man but there could have been only one end to it we are both better off than we would have been tegetrer wit'i him m the clutches of the drink curse offered her 50,000 to wed mrs rosenblatt who is the widow of benjamin roscnb att a wealthy leather dealer of new york is at th c hotel hayes sixty-fourth street and lexington avenue having gone there from the belvoir hotel where she lived with her married sister mrs jeanette eachus i came here to avoid henry mrs rosenblatt explained i wanted to break off with him and only saw him last friday because he wrote such wild letters that i feared for him he offered me 50,000 to marry hlra just a year ago but he has never given me any money or anything of value except a small diamond en gagement ring that belonged to his first wife that i returned to him i never knew that he was of noble family but heard it once and often teased him he always denied it von armenthal had not been seen m the lobby of the palmer house since early saturday afternoon when his door was forced yesterday he was found lying on the floor m his room his head pillowed on a roll of towels in his right hand he grasped the ugly weapon with which he had taken mb life while m the other hand he held a picture of mrs roson identity of bungalow girl still mystery bessie jones said to be slain girl is found alive m home m norfolk va known by 2 other names police here continue to gather more proof that dead Chicago man is the one sought m los angeles cal handbag he brought from west is believed to be stained with blood doctor tells of woman's visit while the police of Chicago were prov ing yesterday more conclusively than ever that caiphas columbus dillon who killed himself saturday morning by diving under a northwestern train at wilmette was the slayer of the bungalow girl at los angeles the police of norfolk va were proving even more conclusively that the victim of the bungalow tragedy wns not j bessie jones bessie jores has used at her eonven i ience the names of bessie howard and | bessie yoglev ruder two of the aliases she was kinwu m the very household of c c dillon under all three of them she is known at norfolk and under all three she was found alive yesterday at 214 strst ford street norfolk mj stery has been piled on mysterj ir the bungalow case just at the moment when it seemed certain that all mystery had been dispelled dillon did not kill the norfolk girl whom then did he kill before that looming interrogation point the police of Chicago of los angeles of norfolk of all the cities m all the states where girls have disappeared stand poised not knowing m what direction to turn bu ready to turn ln any direction new clew m handbag a yellow handbag found in the dillou home on evanston avenue occupied by dil lon's real wife yesterday gave the po lice more evidence to add to the incrim inating mass already piled up against dillon three initials had beeu scraped off the handbag in a leather pocket inside tho bag stains were found although an inef fectual effort had been made to remore them the effort had been made recently for the smell of carbolic acid was still strong the handbag was examined by actlnj captain of detectives james gleason de tective sergeant harry o'donnell and thomas mcfarland and by james mark ham secretary of the detective bureau all of these men have bad extensive ex perience m identifying such stains all agree that the stains found inside dillon's handbag are blood stains all agree that dillon must have postponed his attempt to eraÃŸe the stains until after he reached Chicago police give explanation when dillon had taken that girlâ€”who ever she was to the los angeles bungalow and killed her said sergeant mcfarland he wiped her blood from bis hands first with her handkerchief which was too small for the purpose and then with his own he left her handkerchief there be side her figuring that it could not iden tify him but he placed his own ln the yellow handbag all bloody as it was then he left los angeles his mind dazed he could think of nothing to do but to keep traveling it was not until after he reached Chicago and resume work at his trade that he was able to it more connectedly of his predicament ; to plan m greater detail the c-cstruc'.k . of evidence against himself thus it was not uutil lie !:.>l showers warmer monday east '' ' b^s er,y ' sn,ttln 9 to southerly winds and j k wh probably increasing j m \ j bauge of temperatures yesterday jtyÃŸ v is lowest 43 average 46 in the second section of this paper to-day you will find nearly a hundred rla^-'^^nt'-nns of want ads if you are looking for a maid you will get a good maid here if you are looking for a posi tion you may find just the position you , desire m these columns if you are looking for a room or an apartment you will probably find wha 1 â€¢â€¢">?. want m this list in fact everything you can think of aimost is advertised here from a used piano to an auto mobile whether you want something or want to sell something if you will both read these columns and advertise m them you will get your desire Â® tisers has examined and cert________-__l the eire i lation of thie publ_eat___-b the figures of c irculatioi contained i_-.4 as.ociat ion's report only are gnaranth_l ammoc iat ion of americmn admmrliomth no 2399 whitehall bldg n 7 co